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INTEGRATING THE BUSINESS AND PEOPLE DIMENSION OF
CHANGE
AT
SAFARICOM LIMITED, KENYA
BWALEY KIPLAGAT THOMAS
RESEARCH PROJECT SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF
THE REQUIREMENT FOR THE AWARD OF THE DEGREE OF
MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION,
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS, UNIVERSITY OF NAIROBI
OCTOBER 2014
DECLARATION
I declare that this project is my original work and has never been presented for a degree
award in this or any other university.
................................................... .............................................................
Signature: Date:
Name: Bwaley Kiplagat Thomas
Reg. No: D61/67163/2011
This research project has been submitted for examination with my approval as the university
supervisor
................................................... .............................................................
Signature: Date
DR. VINCENT, N. MACHUKI; PhD
Lecturer,
Department of Business Administration,
School of Business,
University of Nairobi.
ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
With reverence I would like to thank the almighty God for good health, His grace and
blessing through the entire period of my Master of Business Administration program.
I am greatly indebted to my project supervisor, Dr. Vincent Machuki, for his patience,
guidance, consistent support and constructive criticism throughout the period of the research
project.
My heartfelt appreciation goes to my wife Lydia, for her understanding, patience and
encouragement as the research project demanded that I work many hours away from home,
consuming into our precious family time.
I sincerely thank my parents Francis and Agnes Tuwei for the sacrifice they made in
investing their resource and time in my education since my childhood. My current success
and achievements are the fruition of their cultivation and efforts.
My great appreciation goes to all my respondents at Safaricom Kenya limited for sparing
their valuable time to honestly and patiently answer my interview questions. This project
would not have succeeded without their cooperation and generous responses.
Finally, my thanks go to the faculty members of the School of Business at the University of
Nairobi for their support during my course work and my MBA classmates for being a
constant source of encouragement all through the coursework and also during the project
phase.
iii
DEDICATION
This project is dedicated to my family, especially to my parents Francis and Agnes Tuwei
and my lovely wife Lydia Bwaley for their motivation, support and encouragement
throughout the program.
iv
TABLE OF CONTENTS
DECLARATION .................................................................................................................................. i
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................................................ ii
DEDICATION .................................................................................................................................... iii
ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS .......................................................................................... vi
ABSTRACT ...................................................................................................................................... viii
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................... 1
1.1 Background of the Study ................................................................................................................. 1
1.1.1 Business Dimension of Change................................................................................................ 2
1.1.2 People Dimension of Change ................................................................................................... 3
1.1.3 Mobile Telephony Industry in Kenya ...................................................................................... 5
1.1.4 Safaricom Limited, Kenya ....................................................................................................... 7
1.2 Research Problem.......................................................................................................................... 10
1.3 Research Objective........................................................................................................................ 12
1.4 Value of Study .............................................................................................................................. 12
CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE REVIEW ................................................................................ 13
2.1 Introduction ................................................................................................................................... 13
2.2 Theoretical Foundation ................................................................................................................. 13
2.2.1 Open System Model ............................................................................................................... 14
2.2.2 ADKAR Change Management Model ................................................................................... 15
2.3 Managing Organizational Change ................................................................................................. 16
2.4 Integrating the Business and People Dimension of Change.......................................................... 19
CHAPTER THREE: RESEARCH METHODOLOGY ................................................................ 22
3.1 Introduction ................................................................................................................................... 22
3.2 Research Design ............................................................................................................................ 22
3.3 Data Collection.............................................................................................................................. 23
3.4 Data Analysis ................................................................................................................................ 24
v
CHAPTER FOUR: DATA ANALYSIS, FINDINGS AND DISCUSSIONS ............................... 25
4.1 Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 25
4.2 Strategic Changes at Safaricom ................................................................................................ 25
4.3 Business Dimension of Change at Safaricom ........................................................................... 27
4.4 People Dimension of Change at Safaricom............................................................................... 30
4.4.1 Creating Awareness for Change ......................................................................................... 32
4.4.2 Developing a Desire to Support Change ............................................................................ 33
4.4.3 Developing a Knowledge Base of How to Change ............................................................ 34
4.4.4 Facilitating the ability to implement change ...................................................................... 35
4.4.5 Reinforcement to Sustain Change ...................................................................................... 35
4.5 Integrating people and business dimension of change .............................................................. 37
4.6 Resistance to Change at Safaricom ........................................................................................... 42
4.7 Discussion of Findings .............................................................................................................. 43
CHAPTER FIVE: SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS ..................... 46
5.1 Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 46
5.2 Summary of the Findings .......................................................................................................... 46
5.3 Conclusion ................................................................................................................................ 47
5.4 Recommendations for Policy and Practice................................................................................ 49
5.5 Limitation of the Study ............................................................................................................. 50
5.6 Areas for Further Research ....................................................................................................... 50
REFERENCES .................................................................................................................................. 52
APPENDICES ................................................................................................................................... 58
Appendix I: Introduction Letter ...................................................................................................... 58
Appendix II: Letter Requesting Permission to Carry out Research ................................................ 59
Appendix III: Interview Guide ........................................................................................................ 60
vi
ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS
3G: Third Generations
ADKAR: Awareness Desire Knowledge Ability Reinforcement
ARPU: Average Revenue Per User
BNK: Best Network in Kenya
CA: Communication Authority of Kenya
CCK: Communication Commission of Kenya
CDI: Customer Delight Index
CEO: Chief Executive Officer
CFO: Chief Financial Officer
CNM: Core Network Maintenance
EABL: East African Breweries Ltd
ESOP: Employee Share Option Plan
ETACS: Extended Total Access Communication System
G2: Generation 2
GSM: Global System for Mobile communications
HoD: Head of Department
vii
HR: Human Resources
ITIL: Information Technology Infrastructure Library
KPI: Key Performance Indicator
KPTC: Kenya Post & Telecommunication Corporation
Ltd: Limited
LTE: Long Term Evolution
MNO: Mobile Network Operators
MVNO: Mobile Virtual Network Operator
PwC: Pricewaterhouse Coopers
SACCO: Savings and Credit Co-operative
SLA: Service Level Agreement
SIM: Subscriber Interface Module
VoIP: Voice over Internet Protocol
viii
ABSTRACT
This research study is a case study carried out on Safaricom Limited, a leading mobile
network operator in Kenya. The research study was carried out to identify integration of
business and people dimension of change at Safaricom limited, Kenya. Business dimension
of change is the fundamental changes in the business of the organization and its future
direction while people dimension of change focuses on the behavioral aspect of an
individual conduct to work in the desired ways.The research project was conducted by
collecting primary qualitative data captured using a comprehensive interview guide and
administered through direct personal interviews to six respondents who work in different
positions and are directly involved in diverse ways with strategic change at Safaricom
limited. The report contains an in-depth analysis and interpretation of the data, identifying
key aspects of people dimension of change and business dimension of change in relation to
how the two dimension of change have been integrated. The findings of the study revealed
that Safaricom limited has embraced integration of business and people dimension of change
through employee involvement in change formulation, proper feedback mechanism using
employee survey and staff council which has resulted in successful implementation of
change with very limited resistance while having sustainable profitability. This integration
can be further improved through encouraging employees to use available avenues such as
people surveys to genuinely express themselves and raise issues pertinent to improving the
organization‟s climate to optimum productivity. On the other hand the organization should
keep the communication channels widely open, provide regular feedback and be seen to
respond and act on the suggestion given by employees continually. The study further
established that for successful change to occur both people and business dimensions of
change should occur simultaneously with employees transitioning in harmony. Therefore, in
the current turbulent environment, learning organization must integrate the people
dimension of change with the business dimension of change to remain competitive both in
service delivery, as well being an employer of choice and as a partner of choice in business.
The case study has focused on Safaricom limited only and therefore, the findings have not
exhausted the mobile telephony industry, therefore further research should be replicated in
another mobile network operator or in a service industry to verify this study‟s conclusions.
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background of the Study
According to Business Week (1992) special edition, "change can no longer be an occasional
episode in the life of a corporation. Companies with rigid structures will be swept away.
Corporate cultures that can adapt will survive and thrive..." (p.60). Taylor (1911) observed
that some workers were more talented than others, and that even smart ones were often
unmotivated. He observed that most workers who are forced to perform repetitive tasks tend
to work at the slowest rate that goes unpunished. This reflects the idea that workers have a
vested interest in their own well-being, and do not benefit from working above the defined
rate of work when it will not increase their remuneration. Mayo (1933) put forward a
preposition that humans have a deep need for recognition, security and belonging. Rather
than being purely economic beings, the Hawthorne Experiments demonstrated that workers‟
performance and attitudes could be influenced more by their need for recognition and
security, and by the feeling of belonging engendered by informal groups. According to
proponents of behavioral approach, if managers understand their people and adapt their
organizations to them, organizational success will usually follow (Certo & Certo, 2009).
Organizations confront change due to changed circumstances; success of the change
initiative within the organization can only be realized if and only if the people and business
aspects of change are well integrated.
Contingency theorists have based their approach on Systems Theory, adopting the premise
that organizations are open systems whose internal operations and effectiveness are
dependent upon the particular situational variables they face at any one time, and that these
2
vary from organization to organization (Burnes, 2009). Scott (1987) observed that
organizations are not closed systems, sealed off from their environments but are open to and
dependent on flows of personnel and resource from outside. Organization, rather than being
closed systems are viewed as open systems operating within a wider environment and
having multiple channels of interaction (Mullins, 1993). The system approach views
organization as a whole and the relationship between technical and social variables within it.
Changes in one part, technical or social, will affect other parts and thus the whole system
(Mullins, 2007).
Safaricom Kenya limited has been fraught with myriads of changes both systemic and
people aspects. In order to achieve excellent performance organization are told to rationally
analyze their situation and adopt change which is most appropriate for the contingencies
they face, they have to align themselves with their size, technology and environment. For
this to be realized change in organizations has two critical dimensions, business dimension
and people dimension. Successful change happens when both dimensions of change occur
simultaneously.
1.1.1 Business Dimension of Change
Strategic change is a process of radical transition that involves changing a company's vision,
mission, objectives and strategy. A strategic change might include shifts in a corporation's
policies, target market, mission or organizational structure. Mintzberg (1998) has offered
five definitions of strategy: as a plan, a ploy, a pattern, a position and a perspective.
According to Stacey (2003) Strategy comes to be understood as the evolving patterns of an
organization‟s identity, continuously constructed and enacted in the interaction of
3
organizational practice. Therefore the environment where change is targeted must be in sync
with any planned changes to mitigate on the tendency for the system as a whole to reject an
attempted change, even when that change is promoted over a long period of time by a
substantial fraction of the population.
Business dimension of change is thus the fundamental changes in the business of the
organization and its future direction. Hiatt (2006) established that Business dimension of
change includes identifying the business need or opportunity, defining the project (scope and
objectives), designing the business solution (new processes, systems and organizational
structure), developing new processes and systems, implementing solution into the
organization and post implementation evaluation. Areas of concern entails analyzing what
aspects of the organization will be affected, how significant are the alterations to status quo,
how long will the change process last and how much will be the departure from the current
business scenario.
1.1.2 People Dimension of Change
The people dimension is concerned with how employees and stakeholders experience the
process of change. Lawler (2006) argues that he did not believe that people inherently resist
change, he did not think there is an anti-change gene, he thinks people can learn to like
change, certainly can learn to live with it, if the situation is correct. Ohmae (1986) and
Stacey (2003) established that strategy is not a process at all but the outcome of a process:
an outcome shaped not by mathematical models but by human creativity. Pavlov (1927)
argued that human actions are conditioned by their expected consequences. Behaviour that is
rewarded tends to be repeated, and behavior that is ignored tends not to be. Therefore, in
4
order to change behavior, it is necessary to change the condition that causes it (Skinner,
1974). Under the principle of extinction behaviour will stop eventually if it is not rewarded
(Lovell, 1980). Hiatt (2006) under Prosci designed a model for managing people side of
change and established that successful organizational change occurs only when each person
is able to transition successfully.
The importance of embedding the people dimension of change to organizational behavior is
attributed to the changes undertaken in order to avoid behavioral resistance. People
dimension of change involves the alignment of the organization‟s culture, values, people,
and behaviours to encourage the desired results. Effective management of people dimension
of change has been defined by Hiatt (2006) ADKAR model as requiring managing five key
phases namely, Awareness of the need for change, Desire to participate and support the
change, Knowledge of how to change, Ability to implement the change and Reinforcement
to keep the change in place. This process is said to be sequential and therefore, it is not
possible to achieve success in one area unless the previous action has been addressed
effectively.
Awareness entails understanding why change is necessary, it explains the reasoning and
thought that underlies the required change. An individual then is able to reach a point where
he makes a personal decision to support the change and participate in the change. Naturally
a desire to support and be part of the change can only happen after full awareness of the
need for change is established. The third step is providing knowledge about the change,
achieved through down ward cascading of information using forums, formal training,
coaching and mentoring. Once knowledge on how to change is in place (the theory) the
5
actual performance of the individual, needs to be supported involving practical training on
skills required and exposure to the relevant applications. To ensure that change stay in place
and that individuals do not revert to old ways, positive feedback, rewards, recognition,
measuring performance and taking corrective actions is required thus the last step of
reinforcing to sustain change.
1.1.3 Mobile Telephony Industry in Kenya
The information and telecommunication sector is increasingly integrated into the day to day
activities of businesses and lives of households and individuals worldwide. Mobile
telephony industry in Kenya has grown rapidly in the past decade from a duopoly in the year
2003 to the current oligopoly with a total of 31.3 million subscribers at the end of 2013.
Mobile telephony growth has been driven primarily by wireless technologies which allowed
for faster and cheaper rollout of mobile networks (Qiang, Rossotto & Kimura, 2009).
Mobile telephony in Kenya is managed by the Communications Authority of Kenya (CA)
formerly Communications Commission of Kenya (CCK) changed as per Communication
(Amendment) Bill 2013. Nationally, CCK reported a mobile penetration of 76.9%, with a
total of 31.3 million mobile telephone subscribers in its latest report released in April 2014.
Safaricom Limited recorded the largest share of 67.9 per cent; Airtel Networks Limited
followed with 16.5 per cent, Essar Telecom (Yu Mobile) registered 8.5 per cent and Telkom
Kenya (Orange) record 7.2 per cent (CCK 2014). Kenya‟s mobile market has changed
significantly over the last few years with the introduction of the third and fourth Mobile
Network Operators (MNOs), Yu and Orange. MNOs‟ networks now cover 96% of the
population, and intense price competition has seen prices fall by over 70% in the last four
6
years, leading to a significant increase in usage levels. Price war has characterized Kenya‟s
mobile communications sector in recent years. This has led to accelerated subscriber growth,
but it has also presented challenges to the profitability of the operators, forcing them to
streamline their operations and develop new revenue streams in an environment of falling
average revenue per user (ARPU) in the voice market.
The telecom industry is rapidly evolving, shaped by the evolution of technology and light-
speed innovation. It is also an industry that is constantly redefining itself. This presents
communication providers with both opportunities to expand their business reach and threats
from the entry of a myriad of nimble and aggressive new players thus competition here is at
its best (Resende, 2013). Due to increased uncertainty of the future, accelerated tempo of
new technology, the concentrated patterns of consumption and global competition from
operators like WhatsApp, Facebook, Twitter and Telegram as opposed to localized
competition, MNOs are pushed to change the way of doing things and dependence on only
one stream of revenue that was typically voice traffic to alternative value adding services.
Migration to third generation (3G) mobile broadband services as well as mobile payment
and banking services are delivering these additional revenues, but all service segments are
highly competitive still (Lange, 2014).
MNOs in Kenya operate in a challenging investment environment and are subject to a
number of market and regulatory pressures. Falling prices have led to decreasing ARPU
levels for MNOs, and three out of four MNOs are receiving negative returns (Deloitte,
2011). MNOs have initiated various strategic changes to adapt to the developments so as to
achieve competitive advantage in the industry. Operators have had to be rebranded or
7
acquired by multinationals to keep to the speed of competing forces. Example is KenCell
which was acquired by Celtel in 2004 then to Zain and currently Airtel is the brand name in
mobile industry, it has also entered into a strategic partnership with Equity bank to roll out
Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO) which will emulate all Equity‟s banking
services into the mobile phone (www. africa.airtel.com, 2014). Telkom Kenya was bought
by French Orange and Econet bought by Essar and rebranded as YU, while Safaricom did an
overhaul of its management with a complete restructuring of the organizational structure.
1.1.4 Safaricom Limited, Kenya
Safaricom Ltd is a leading mobile network operator in Kenya which started as a department
of Kenya Posts & Telecommunications Corporation. It launched operations in 1993 based
on an analogue ETACS network and was upgraded to GSM in 1996 (license awarded in
1999). Safaricom was incorporated on April 1997 as a private limited liability company and
fully owned subsidiary of Telkom Kenya. In May 2000, Vodafone group Plc. of the United
Kingdom acquired a 40% stake and management responsibility for the company. In
accordance with the Government of Kenya‟s policy of divesting its ownership in public
enterprises, the Government of Kenya through the Treasury Department, on 28 March 2008
made available to the public 25% of the existing ordinary shares of par value Ksh 0.05 each,
of the Company. Currently the shareholder structure is with Government of Kenya 35%,
Vodafone 40% and Free Float 25% traded on Nairobi stock exchange.
In order to respond to the challenges of new competitors, markets, and technologies,
Safaricom had to undergo continual change. Some change programs were strategic in nature,
while others were more operational, these strategic changes coalescing around Business
8
dimension and People dimension of change. Safaricom has undergone various strategic
changes both planned and emergent changes from being a department of KPTC to a private
liability company in 1997, then onboarding of a strategic investor through a partial
acquisition by Vodafone plc. acquiring 40% stake in 2000 and taking over the management
responsibility. In 2008 the Kenyan government offloaded 25% of its stake making the
company a public company with limited liability. This meant the Government of Kenya was
left with 35% control and thus left the company to be run independently without much
influence from the central government giving it a better strategic level of decision making in
business, free of political influence. Under the collaboration with Vodafone wealth of
experience in mobile telephony worldwide the company took off from being problem child
(Question marks) to being Stars and hypothetically a cash cow. To adapt to the demands of
its achievements and competing forces, Safaricom had to undergo leadership changes and
structural changes where a new CEO was brought on board in November 1, 2010, to inject
and drive change necessitated by the overwhelming internal and external environment
conditions.
To adapt to the ever changing technology and improved awareness and knowledge of its
market, Safaricom has continuously invested in the network and proudly boasts of being the
most advanced and extensive network in Kenya and describes itself as a leading provider of
converged communication solutions, operating on a single business driver that has a peerless
understanding of voice, video and data requirements. Additionally, they have also been
working extremely hard to be a one stop shop for integrated and converged data and voice
communication solutions with extended service such as cloud computing and co-location
facilities. Safaricom with its countrywide network is the only network that can provide
9
broadband high-speed data to its customers through its 3G network, Wimax and fibre.
Safaricom has commenced technical trials of the next generation of mobile data technology;
Long Term Evolution (LTE) as a pioneer in the region to have a trial of this technology
making it a leader not only in service provision but also in technological advancement.
To maintain the market share Safaricom introduced lower airtime vouchers to cater for the
high spending low income earners such as ksh 5,10,20,50 and 100, initially the lowest
airtime voucher available was Ksh 250. It has also aggregated various tariffs that were
confusing to the customer into a single tariff called Uwezo. From per minute browsing
billing Safaricom has introduced a range of data bundles. Safaricom has been able to keep a
tab on the pulse of the consumers and has been nimble enough to adjust its value proposition
to the needs of the consumers. Safaricom has ensured consistent branding, training and
constant supervision of the retail stores to deliver the right user experience and has worked
tirelessly for proper liquidity management at the stores.
Safaricom has undertaken various strategic changes, from Safaricom 1.2 with a vision to be
the best company in Africa, to Safaricom 2.0 that entailed changing the company structure,
culture and mindsets focusing on the stakeholders who are Safaricom‟s business ecosystems
with a vision of Transforming lives ( Safaricom annual report, 2012) to the current
Safaricom 2.0 reloaded anchored on eight key pillars of democratising data, deepening
financial inclusion, Best network in Kenya (BNK), YOLO (youth original local
outstanding), delighting customers, youth space and acting with speed, simplicity and trust.
What remains to be established is how effective is the integration of business and people
dimension of change in strategic management at Safaricom.
10
1.2 Research Problem
Most organizations know their businesses, and the strategies required for success. However
many struggle to translate the theory into action that will enable the strategy to be
successfully implemented and sustained while others fail to transfer the strategic choices
into operational actions, and to truly motivate their people to work with enthusiasm and
cohesively towards the corporate aim. On the other hand business environment is changing
faster than ever before, new technologies are emerging constantly at an increasing velocity,
and industries are shaken by deregulation and new entrants while some adapt others fail.
Having executives and employees change their thinking, beliefs and behaviours is
demanding and difficult. This is because change is a complex, multi-stage process rather
than a silo event (Kotter, 1995) and much has to be done to create a sense of urgency, win
support, and silence cynics.
Safaricom like many organizations has in the past designed business solutions, developed
new process and repeatedly done massive restructuring. What stirs ones curiosity is how
business dimension and People dimension of change has been integrated at the company.
Previous studies have not addressed the integration of business and people dimension of
change. PricewaterCoopers (2013) for instance researched on people integration at PwC,
Cabrey& Haughey (2013) researched on enabling organizational change through strategic
initiatives, Murugi (2013) dealt with the human dimension of change management in
universities in Kenya, Pan (2012) studied Change Management on the People Dimension,
Mungai (2011) on the people dimension in managing change at Kenya Power & Lighting
Company, Saratoga (2010) studied managing people in a changing world, all these have
11
similar conceptual framework but different contextualization. Muema (2013) looked at the
strategic change management practices and challenges at Safaricom limited, Musau (2012)
established the change management approaches adopted by Safaricom limited, Kisienya
(2012) analyzed Strategic responses to competitive environment by mobile telephony firms
in Kenya, Gichagi (2011) studied strategic responses to dynamic business environment by
Safaricom and Olunga (2007) studied Responses of Safaricom limited to changes in the
Telecommunication industry in Kenya which are all similar contextual framework but
different conceptualization.
All these researchers did not venture into the two dimension of change which hypothetically
could be the drivers of results obtained in the above mentioned studies. In the current global
business regime the relationship between people and business is becoming a perceived key
factor in the success of organizations. While researchers have delved more on business
dimension and some on people dimension of change independently, integration of business
and people dimension of change is an area that is yet to be studied. Study on the relationship
between systemic and behavioral changes needs to be undertaken to give a scholarly
direction on the impact of the twain dimensions on change management and success of
organizational changes. Therefore this study sought to bridge the gap, to what extent have
people and business dimension of change been integrated at Safaricom ltd?
12
1.3 Research Objective
The objective of the study was to determine the extent to which the business and people
dimension of change have been integrated at Safaricom ltd, Kenya.
1.4 Value of Study
Having completed the study it is a major contribution in the management of strategic change
especially on business and people dimension thus adding to the body of knowledge in
strategic change. It is going to be a source of reference and knowledge base for future
researchers and academicians in the field of strategic change and related studies thus, form a
basis for other future studies.
This study has provided a frame work for policy development into recommending
integrating business and people dimension of change through downward cascading and
horizontally aspects of change in mobile industry and other organization. For the
government and the regulatory authority agencies the study is important in formulating
policy and regulations in the Telecommunication industry for national social and economic
development plans in view of harmonization of objective between business and people.
The study has also provided a view point on how managers carry out activities that coalesce
to inform decisions while managing change in day to day managerial practice. The findings
has further helped managers at Safaricom Ltd understand clearly the significance of
integrating business and people aspects of change in organizational success.
13
CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Introduction
This chapter presents the literature review of previous studies and findings in the field of
strategic change management and empirical evidence and discussions on change,
management of organizational change and dimensions of change with a view of studying the
impact of integrating business dimension and people dimension of change. This chapter
provides the theoretical foundation in which this study has been based and the discussion on
the direction of integrating people and business aspects of change.
2.2 Theoretical Foundation
The theories underpinning this study are Open System Theory and ADKAR model (Hiatt,
2006). According to Kotter (2001), a central feature of modern organization is
interdependence, where no one has complete autonomy; employees tied to each other by
their work, technology and hierarchy, presenting a special challenge to change process, and
requiring alignment of people. Senge (2006) observed that the limits of growth and
organizational learning often frustrated organizational changes. Kaplan and Norton (2006)
argued that continual search for organizational form is driven by changes in nature of
competition and economy and Kaplan (2007) argued that the world is constantly changing as
business evolves, new products and distribution channels emerge, requiring changing the
people and incentives, tangible resources, and operating style.
Hiatt (2006) argues that if you are an employee in an organization undergoing change, your
reaction to the change and how you are viewed by the organization will be directly affected
14
by each of the five elements in the ADKAR model of awareness, desire, knowledge, ability
and reinforcement. According to Creasey (2007) when you introduce change to the
organization, you are going to be impacting on system, process, organizational structure and
job roles. He further establishes that the change typically results as a reaction to specific
problems or opportunities the organization is facing based on internal or external stimuli
with the intention of becoming more competitive or becoming closer to the customer or
becoming more efficient.
According to Cummings & Worley (2009) open system theory recognizes that organizations
exists in the context of a larger environment that affects how the organization performs and
in turn is affected by how the organization interacts with it. How these interaction are handle
in the business dimension or people dimension of change determines the organization
competency to meet the external and internal requirements and successfully navigate
through the desired changes.
2.2.1 Open System Model
Open systems theory refers to the concept that organizations are strongly influenced by their
environment (Bastedo, 2014). An open system is a system that in some way or another has
interaction with its surrounding environment, it has inputs and outputs. This interaction with
the outside environment implies that open systems need to be able to adapt to the changes
that occur in their environment (Cutajar, 2010). The open systems approach to management
considers all organizations as open systems.
15
Organizations being open systems are composed of a number of interconnected sub- systems
which are the organizational goals and values sub-system, the technological sub-systems, the
psychological sub-system and the managerial sub-system. The open-systems theory further
argues that each of the subsystem receives inputs from other subsystems and turns them into
outputs for use by other subsystems and any change to one part of the system will impact on
its performance. The systems approach to change is based on describing and evaluating
these sub systems in order to determine how they need to change so as to improve the
overall functions and performance of the organization (Burnes 1998, Skinner 1994). The
globalization of markets, rapid advancements in new technology, higher levels of
competition, increasing focus on costs and cost management and the inevitable excess of
demand over supply in terms of talented individuals all contribute to the drive for change
within contemporary organizations.
2.2.2 ADKAR Change Management Model
According to Hiatt (2006) when a group undergoes a change, it is not the organization that
changes, but rather the behaviours of individuals, this change in collective behavior is what
produces different outcomes for the organization. He further notes that Organizational
change management and individual change management must be used together to manage
change successfully, thus the development of ADKAR model which focuses on change at an
individual level, and the specific needs of that individual, in order for that person to change
their behaviours to the desired ways of working, the new culture.
The ADKAR Model reflects the necessary building blocks for individual change which
entails awareness of the need for change, desire to support and participate in the change,
16
knowledge of how to change, ability to implement the change and reinforcement to sustain
the change (Hiat, 2006). The ADKAR model is that link between individual performance,
organizational change management and business results. It focuses on change at an
individual level and the unique needs of that individual, so that the person can change their
behaviour to the desired ways of working, the new way of doing business.
2.3 Managing Organizational Change
According to Todd (1999) change management is a structured and systematic approach to
achieving a sustained change in human behaviour within an organization. Hiatt (2006) said that change management is applying techniques and tools to manage the people-side of
change to achieve the desired results with minimal disruption or negative side effects. Kotter
(1982) studied the daily activities of 15 executives and concluded that they spent most of
their time developing and working a network of relationships from which they gained
general insights and specific details to be used in making strategic decisions. They tended to
use mental road maps rather than systematic planning techniques. Lewin (1951) argues that
there are forces that drive change and those restraining it, where there is equilibrium
between the two sets of forces there will be no change. In order for change to occur the
driving forces must exceed the restraining forces. Managing change requires consistency of
approach and constancy of purpose. There are two tasks that successful change programs
have to achieve, the change management process, focusing on the process steps in the
change management project plan and the transition of people, providing successful change
in individuals and changing their behaviours to a new desired state.
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Change is disruptive, messy, and complicated. Even with the best laid plans, events rarely
occur exactly as they were predicted. Nadler (1998) argued that real change in real
organizations is intensely personal and enormously political. Change processes entail not
only structures and ways of doing tasks, but also the performance, expectations and
perceptions of all involved parties. To effectively adapt to change, most established
organizations have a daunting task ahead of them in a variety of operational and procedural
areas. Business processes must be redefined and redesigned and adapted to specific
geographical and cultural settings. The workforce needs to be retrained to be ready for
changes in how work is done, what skills and knowledge is needed. The very culture of an
organization needs to be reshaped to properly support the new processes introduced.
Structures, reward systems, appraisal measurements and roles need redefinition (Bainbridge,
1996).
Change in an organization may face systemic resistance occasioned by passive
incompetence of the organization to change, whereby the system as a whole reject an
attempted change, even if that change is promoted over a long period of time by a
substantial fraction of the population. This may be attributed to among other factors current
organization design, organizational culture, resource limitations, fixed investments and
inter-organizational agreements. Systemic resistance occurs whenever the development of
capacity lags behind strategy development or when there is a disjointed interlinks. In many
organizations departments, functions and sections each have their own area of specialization
and self-interest. The end result is a situation where many people are performing excellent
jobs in their own fields, very often at the expense of others and not even knowing what
others are doing (Parumasur & Barkhuizen, 2009). There are lots of reasons why people
18
may be hesitant about changing the way they do things. Therefore, organization and job
structures need to be designed in such a way as to enable workers to meet both their material
and non-material needs. Only in this way will employees perform efficiently and effectively
in the best interests of the organization.
Hiatt (2006) argues that under ADKAR Model situation awareness principle requires that
executives and employees be set in their organizational contexts to understand the situations,
recognize and accept the need to change. They have to be convinced of the reasons for
change and understand what is in it for them and the consequences if change is not enacted.
It is essential for both executives and employees to recognize that radical change is
imperative and accept the new direction. Without a clear awareness of the situation,
executives and employees may underestimate the consequences of keeping the status quo.
As a result, they may not be committed to the change initiative and may find it hard to pull
themselves out of their comfort zones.
The desire to support and take part in the change is dependent on the nature of change,
credibility of the driver of change, intrinsic factors and history of the organization. Therefore
the employee should be motivated to desire change. With the desire cultivated the people
should be given the knowledge of how to change and what to do to make the desired change
happen, this can be achieved through training, seminars and knowledge transfers. Ability to
implement the change is then developed by providing the skills to implement change on a
day to day basis through daily involvement, access to subject matter experts and hands on
job training. To keep the change in place reinforcement is essential, by creating an
environment to sustain the change through celebrations, recognition, rewards, feedback to
19
and from employees, audits and performance measurement systems. Organizations that
desire a clear articulation of what they want to change and desire to make it happen would
integrate the Business side and the people side of change to provide a smooth and
homogeneous transitioning.
2.4 Integrating the Business and People Dimension of Change
“When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the
Universe” (Muir, 1911, p.110) and it has been said that you cannot change one thing without
changing the whole thing (Price Waterhouse Change Integration Team, 1995). The results
and outcomes of workplace changes are intrinsically and inextricably tied to individual
employees doing their jobs differently. A perfectly designed process that no one follows
produces no improvement in performance, a perfectly designed technology that no one uses
creates no additional value to the organization and perfectly defined job roles that are not
fulfilled by employees deliver no sustained results. Whether in the workplace, in your
community or in government, the bridge between a quality solution and benefit realization is
individuals embracing and adopting the change (Hiatt and Creasey 2003).
According to Thompson and Strickland (2003), proficient strategy execution depends
heavily on competent personnel, better-than-adequate competitive capabilities, and effective
internal organization. Saratoga (2010), argues that it is not people that are the greatest assets
to an organization, but the relationship with them. Adding to a company‟s talent base and
building intellectual capital is more important to good strategy execution than additional
investments in plants, equipment and capital projects. This entails screening and evaluating
job applicants, selecting only those with suitable skill sets, energy, initiative, judgment,
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aptitude for learning and personality traits that mesh well with the company‟s environment
and culture. Putting employees through training program that continue through their careers
and providing employees with challenging, interesting and skill stretching assignments.
Progressive companies work hard at creating environment in which ideas and suggestions
bubble up from below and employees are made to feel that their views and suggestion count.
Kotter (1995) found that, it is possible for the resistance to be sited within the individual, but
it is much more likely to be found elsewhere in the system. When the processes are
integrated, the result is that people are primed and ready for the change with cultivation of a
culture of trust, transparent communication, involved, engaged employees and positive
interpersonal relationships. Employees feel free to tell their boss what they think and to have
open exchanges with managers. Absence of integration results in systemic resistance which
occurs whenever the development of capacity lags behind strategy development. Weinrich,
Cannnice and Koontz (2008) established that involvement of organizational members in
planning change can reduce uncertainty and communication about proposed changes also
helps clarify reasons for change.
Organizational Culture can impede or facilitate change, therefore it is necessary to examine
the cultural fit with the strategic change and ensure the two are synchronized.
Communicating the change to appropriate stakeholders and involving people frequently to
create champions of change lead to integration of business and people dimension of change
providing a key to unlock systemic and behavioral resistance to change. According to Senge
(2006), people excel and learn when there is a genuine shared vision and not the familiar
traditional vision statement. This is because they want to and not because they are told to,
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while adaptive learning is possible without vision, generative learning occurs only when
people are striving to accomplish something that matters deeply to them. With a shared
vision, work becomes part of pursuing a larger purpose typified in the organization‟s
products or services. Learning is accelerated through communication, information
technology and equipment (Senge, 2006). A shared vision is necessary to oppose rigid
support of the status quo and to facilitate creative change by fostering risk taking and
experimentation. It will be perfectly clear to employees why they are doing what they are
doing. According to Weinrich, Cannnice and Koontz (2008) concept of harmony of
objectives, individuals have personal goals that are different from organizational goals but
these can be harmonized. PricewaterCoopers (2013) established that successful integration
involves detailed planning and execution, retaining the right people, designing the
organization, aligning cultures, and communicating effectively.
For an organization to successfully implement change, it must be change-ready, meaning
that the people and structure of the organization are prepared for and capable of changing in
harmony. Successful people integration should include a change management program to
help companies motivate, retain, and acquire pivotal talent (PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2013).
Muema (2013) observed that there should be collaboration between departments through
group meetings, project matrix structures, restructuring and organization of frequent offsite
strategy meetings among concerned departmental heads and middle level managers and
team building between different departments to synchronize common practice before and
during change. According to Cabrey & Haughey (2014) factors that make organizations
effective at change include having a culture that embraces the change and effectively
managing employees through the change.
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CHAPTER THREE: RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
3.1 Introduction
This chapter sets out to discuss the research methodology that was used for conducting the
study. The chapter outlines the research design that was adopted, methods of data collection
and data analysis. With the research question being the epicentre of the study, data collection
and analysis methods were chosen so as to use those most likely to provide insights into the
research.
3.2 Research Design
The research design for this study was a case study. According to Yin (1994) a Case Study
is an empirical inquiry that investigates a contemporary phenomenon within its real-life
context; when the boundaries between phenomenon and context are not clearly evident; and
in which multiple sources of evidence are used. It refers to an in-depth and detailed analysis
of a person, group or situation. A Case study is undertaken on an individual case and
involves the systematic collection of data, analyzing data then drawing conclusions that may
lead to a report on the findings. According to Yin (2003) a case study should be considered
when the focus of the study is to answer how and why questions, as well as where you
cannot manipulate the behaviour of those involved in the study and where you want to cover
contextual conditions because you believe they are relevant to the phenomenon under study.
A Case Study was chosen as the research design for this research project since it allowed for
an in-depth examination of events and phenomena within a real-life context for purposes of
theory development and testing. Key was the fact the study was conducted in one
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organization namely Safaricom limited and the desire was to collect an in depth information
of the subject of study. Case study design allowed the researcher to study the complex
relationship between phenomena, context, and people. The case study was on determining
the extent to which business and people dimension of change has been integrated at
Safaricom ltd. Researchers such as Muema (2013) and Mungai (2011) have successfully
used case study in their research work.
3.3 Data Collection
The main source of data for the study was primary qualitative data that was captured using a
comprehensive interview guide. The interview guide was formulated along the study
objectives and administered through personal interviews. Personal interview was chosen
because the researcher would be able to ask respondents questions to get required answers
and incase of any ambiguity it would be corrected immediately thus high flexibility,
excellent opportunity to probe further with a high response rate.
The interviewees were director strategy and innovation division, two heads of department,
two change champions and one staff working on strategy division on implementation. The
researcher conducted direct and personally administered the interviews. The direct personal
interview method was preferred in this case study, so as to obtain in-depth information from
the respondents and clarifying any issue not clear to the respondent for an accurate
information gathering. The interview guide was designed so as to identify how business
dimension of change has been integrated with people dimension of change in Safaricom
Limited.
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3.4 Data Analysis
The study gathered data that were largely qualitative in nature. Therefore, qualitative
methods of data analysis were used and the preferred qualitative method was content
analysis technique. This is a technique of making inferences by systematically and
objectively identifying specific characteristics of messages as the basis to relate trends
(Nachmias and Nachmias, 1996). It captures a qualitative picture of interviewees concerns,
ideas, attitudes and feelings. According to Weber (1990) Content analysis can be a useful
technique for allowing us to discover and describe the focus of individual, group,
institutional, or social attention. Researchers like Musau (2012) on Change management at
Safaricom Limited and Muema (2013) on Strategic change management practices and
Challenges at Safaricom limited, successfully used content analysis technique in their
studies.
The nature of the data to be collected from this study was from direct personally
administered interviews targeting the specific individuals drawn from top and middle level
managers of Safaricom Limited. The in-depth understanding of the responses from the
respondents was used in the analysis and interpretation of the data. Organization‟s changes
was categorized, and analyzed as systemic/business dimension or people dimension of
change. The extent to which the dimensions of change were integrated was then be deduced.
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CHAPTER FOUR: DATA ANALYSIS, FINDINGS AND DISCUSSIONS
4.1 Introduction
This chapter presents data analysis, findings and discussion of the primary data obtained
through personal interview using a comprehensive interview guide which was administered
to six respondents namely, the director of strategy and innovation, two heads of department,
a senior strategy and projects lead and two change champions at Safaricom Limited. The
study had one objective, to determine the extent to which the business and people dimension
of change have been integrated at Safaricom ltd, Kenya. The data was thereafter analyzed
using content analysis based on the objectives of the study and the findings presented as per
the different themes underlined below.
4.2 Strategic Changes at Safaricom
The study interrogated interviewees on whether there was a strategic change program
adopted by Safaricom Ltd in the recent past. On interrogating strategic change at Safaricom
ltd, Interviewee X said,
“Safaricom undertook a strategic change by shifting from focusing on wide coverage
and capacity to focusing on being the best network in Kenya (BNK), not just best by
our standard but as measured by independent bench marks as well as net promoter
score based on customer opinion”.
This according to the interviewee came after discovering that the success the company had
in the first ten years could not navigate it through the highly competitive sea of mobile
industry as a mobile network operator. The interviewees observed that Safaricom joined the
industry after Kencell currently Airtel, with its previous strategies suited as a follower in the
market and therefore the interest was on rolling out as many sites as possible for wider
26
coverage, hence the famous adverts such as Safaricom is now in Naivasha and Safaricom
comes to Meru. This earlier strategy was noted by the interviewees to have been focused on
expansion of infrastructure, network coverage and customer market share, thus the
company‟s vision was to be the best company in Africa. For which the interviewees said the
company achieved by being the mobile network operator with largest market share, then
becoming second most profitable organization after EABL and thereafter the leading tax
payer in the country. The strategic shift therefore was from focus on infrastructure fit to
customer based business focus by looking more on the customer experience than the
network coverage area.
According to the respondents Safaricom undertook strategic change by putting the systemic
structures in place. The respondents were in agreement that the first phase was in employing
a new CEO from outside the company indicating the beginning of a new dispensation and
giving the change credibility among employees. This was followed by restructuring that
involved re-organization of all functional and operational levels with leadership teams put in
place. Having put up the critical structures that gave the skeleton of the re-engineered
Safaricom, the interviewees observed that a new vision statement was established of
„Transforming lives‟.
According to the respondents Safaricom realized that it was operating in an open system,
whose success in a stiff environment would depend on the feedback from internal and
external reaction and how the feedback would be processed for the company to gain a
competitive advantage in the industry. From the external environment the respondents
indicated that Safaricom did not initially focus on customer experience but rather capacity,
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expansion and new technology but interrogation of aspects showed that to be the best
network was a derivative of being valued and to be valued involved managing customer
feelings, expectation and delivering simple products. Therefore, Safaricom established a
new strategy shift from focusing on infrastructure expansion to focusing on people driven by
the mission of transforming lives, with a key focus on putting the customer first and being
obsessed with the subscriber needs. The company emphasized on having the customer
facing entities to effectively and efficiently manage the clients and stakeholders expectation
and process their feedback and request with speed, simplicity and trust that ultimately grew
to be the business culture dapped Safaricom way.
4.3 Business Dimension of Change at Safaricom
On interrogating the interviewees on what changes have taken place at Safaricom Kenya ltd
concerning the business dimension, the respondents highlighted that until 2011 Safaricom
bread basket in revenue streams was on voice calls but then challenges arose threatening the
revenue streams locally through price wars leading to fall in calling rates from kshs 12 to
kshs 4 per minute charge. Respondents also indicated that a global challenge arose on voice
calls through customers using alternative option of international calls other than GSM such
as voice over internet protocol like Skype calls and termination of international calls through
SIM boxes.
With these challenges choking the business profitability the respondents said that Safaricom
sought for alternative revenue streams to focus more on so as to back up the traditional
business of voice calls, the focus was therefore, directed to Mpesa, data and collocation
facilities. According to the respondents Mpesa service that was introduced in March 2007
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originally seen as a mere values added service to customers, was re-engineered to be a
transformative sector in Safaricom business. Making the then pure person to person
transaction evolve into person to business and thereafter business to person transaction on
boarding corporates in Mpesa use through lipa na Mpesa, pay bill services, mobile banking
thus resulting in a major strategic inflexion point and changed how Safaricom and society
transacted business and the national economy shifted as well. Further the business has
planned to transfer the entire Mpesa platform infrastructure from Europe to Kenya through
G2 project plan.
According to interviewees over-focus on data was also introduced with the mission of
democratizing data so as to have all mobile users with data enabled phones to be able to
access internet. This shift resulted in 15,000 to 17,000 subscribers accessing internet for the
first time every day in the period 2010 to 2011, deepening information inclusion across the
country a transformative strategic move. Also the respondents said there was a new focus on
enterprise business unit especially on small and medium enterprise. Safaricom spoke to their
needs by providing a shared infrastructure in the form of cloud computing, domain / hosted
services and conferencing services. According to director strategy Safaricom got some
traction having seen the benefits and the opportunities for being partner of choice in
business to the SMEs.
The respondents indicated that for Safaricom to retain its profitability and market lead
restructuring, shift in target market, change in policies and mission was inevitable thus a
new CEO and a new CFO were recruited externally. With a new chief executive officer on
board Safaricom re-engineered its business strategies towards customer focus by way of
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restructuring in which the earlier functional structure characterized by commercial and non-
commercial arms were organized into customers facing profit centres which comprise of
financial services, consumer business unit and enterprise business unit divisions and non-
customer facing corporate centres like technology, customer care, risk management,
resources, finance, corporate affairs, marketing and strategy and innovation divisions. An
interviewee argued that this was essential for clear identification of customer touch-points to
enable the business feel the customer and therefore supply optimum value to the customers,
becoming more agile and responsive to customers and doing everything possible to be seen
as a partner of choice.
The respondents said that there were fundamental changes in the future direction of the
business with target market shifting to the young generation who would be tomorrow‟s high
end users and therefore products were rolled out targeting the youth. The company‟s vision
was also changed from the slogan „to be the best company in Africa‟ to „transforming lives‟
and everything else being implemented at Safaricom was to be done with the eyesight of
transforming lives.
The respondents further indicated that Safaricom introduced a new robust and aggregated
process for change management known as service management suite used to manage all
service requests, reporting of incidences and corrective actions, defining SLAs and timelines
and tracking of incidences and process. In this platform all actions must be logged in
detailing the procedure to be undertaken, fall back plan, service impact, actionee and
planned execution time. The changes raised was said to be discussed by a committee before
action to avoid situation where two service affecting changes are run concurrently thus
30
aligning all activities in the business. This system also was observed to provide avenue for
problem management and track of recurring issues which deserve high level expert handling
for escalation with an automated escalation of incidences of failure to close within period.
4.4 People Dimension of Change at Safaricom
When respondents were asked what changes have taken place at Safaricom Kenya ltd
concerning the people they said that the first thing done was to bring in a new leadership
face in the form of a new CEO and a new director of resource to provide a fresh prism of
handling human resources. According to the respondents as an organization you can have
the best technology, the best rules but without a genuine relationship with the workforce
everything else will lose its value. The respondents indicated that the new CEO shared his
vision assuring employees that he came for the better of Safaricom as a whole and not to
send employees home.
The interviewees observed that communication and assurance from the CEO to the senior
management team and employees that the changes in leadership would be done in a
competitive process was essential. In addition Safaricom recruited an independent consultant
to guide through the interviews and change process, this indicated that the CEO was ready to
work with all without preferences, a key preparation on people aspect of the change and this
consistency of purpose was said to have provided trust through the change process.
According to the interviewees work groups were formed for instance in technology division,
the groups analyzed how divisional restructuring was to be done. The work groups were
constituted by representatives from all existing sections and their role was to seek employee
31
opinion and come up with a more lean, effective and efficient structure. These created a
sense of ownership in the restructuring of the division and desire to have it work with
models tested and interrogated before flouting it for application. Series of town hall
meetings, workshops and forums were then held to sensitize the employees and obtain
feedback on the intended proposed changes. Campaigns were finally made through emails,
posters and branding of website to Safaricom tech 2.0 with idle computer and laptop
windows displaying the re-alignments as screen saver.
The interviewees further identified that „skip level‟ meeting were organized by the CEO and
directors whereby the chiefs or the CEO would visit employees in their workstations directly
without being accompanied by HoDs or senior managers for direct interaction and sharing of
opinions and concern with CEO in person. In your shoe program was also introduced where
the management team went to the workstation and performed the normal duties of
employees so as to have a feel of the daily experiences of the employees and thereafter
cross-sectional in your shoe program to enable employees have the experience of other
teams. According to the interviewees the „skip level‟ and „in your shoe‟ programs provided a
platform for having a unified obsession of delighting Safaricom customer by harmonizing
cross-sectional objectives and SLAs under the banner of speed, simplicity and trust that is
Safaricom way.
Under the new regime the interviewees identified that Safaricom changed how it carried out
employee satisfaction program by way of introducing people survey in which employees
rated managers based on people management index and satisfaction index to gauge
employee perception of how their managers engage them and with what suggestion they
32
have for Safaricom to be an employer of choice. The employee survey score was said to
contribute to the manager‟s calibration score on performance at the end of the year imposing
managers to change how they relate with staff under them.
Another people aspect the respondents gave was the change in the working culture where
people moved from a motto of I deliver no matter what it takes to delighting the customer.
Therefore, the entire Safaricom system became synchronized with all subsystems in the
form of people and work groups being obsessed with customer needs providing a seamless
hand over of functions towards giving the best service to the customers from the service
retail desk to the best network and to excellent value added services all geared to making the
customers happy. Employees were encouraged to change their mindset from seeing
customers as source of problem to looking at them as the spring of revenue and as an
indirect employer without whom they will be no Safaricom and thus no employment
opportunities. Attitude towards the customers was given a fresh positive look as a reason for
the company‟s existence and as such a mutual relationship was essential to build between
partners, customers and employees, targeting a better customer delight index score.
4.4.1 Creating Awareness for Change
According to the respondents awareness of the need for change was a critical foundation for
strategic change at Safaricom and publicity was key. The CEO clearly communicated to the
employees that turn around was essential to remain competitive and that retaining the status
quo meant Safaricom was going to lose its position in the telephony industry and therefore
there was need to change the way of doing business. Communication channels directly to
CEO were opened through “Sema na Bob” conversations in the company‟s intranet, this
33
engagement was anonymous to allow staff to voice their views without fear of being
victimized. Through these conversations the CEO clarified that doing things differently was
inevitable for Safaricom to keep its market share and unmatched profit and that the existent
strategies could not take the company any further forward. What if scenarios were identified
to have been modeled and the consequences of changing and of keeping status quo were
compared to put employees in the bigger picture of the future of Safaricom.
The CEO further shared his vision of Safaricom desiring to have a company that is wide but
dynamic and effective likening it to having an elephant that can dance, the customer being
the king, river and the source of Safaricom success. The management made a crusade of
focusing on customer delight and therefore, the preparatory message being there was need to
change how the customer is being served to build in the customer an inner desire and loyalty
to use Safaricom services at all times and have Safaricom as a partner of choice in business.
4.4.2 Developing a Desire to Support Change
The respondents indicated that top management shared the success story of Safaricom ltd
showing that the future was at the hands of all current employees. Workshops were held for
employees to come up with what can be done to realize desired results and since ideas
originated from among the employees especially in re-organizing the divisions, employees
yearned for what they proposed to be implemented with a greater sense of ownership and
urgency.
According to interviewee Y, the use of some of the best change advisors in the market who
painted a Safaricom to be picture with a future that looked rosy after the change than the
34
current state created a sense of urgency to implement change among the employees.
Assurance of equal opportunities to all and a guarantee for an open, transparent and fair
recruitment process through open interviews initiated a fire for change as employees hoped
to take up some new challenging roles with understanding that there is something good for
them.
4.4.3 Developing a Knowledge Base of How to Change
On developing knowledge for change the respondents said Safaricom organized
departmental forums, seminars and workshops under the guidance of human resource
department to elaborate on change and identify the needs required for change. Champions
for change were identified through departmental nominations of who were to take part in the
top level arrangements and thereafter cascade the understanding to sections bringing all
teams to the same level of knowledge and appreciation of the reason and purpose of change.
Team leader core network, observed that there was a need to unlearn old ways so as to
embrace the new way of doing things.
According to the interviewees new behavioral approaches were developed bringing down
the silos of leadership and aligning teams to shared objectives. In depth knowledge was
provided through E-learning programs for greater understanding of change process and
sponsoring of staff to undertake ITIL certification program resulted in a better informed
employee set who were ready to implement change. Some employees were also seconded to
work in Vodafone sister companies abroad to develop a wider knowledge based on best
practices and skill sets essential for their specialties through a mentorship program.
35
4.4.4 Facilitating the ability to implement change
The respondents agreed that Safaricom provided requisite and specialized trainings abroad
with original equipment manufacturers, provided trainings and workshops with local
vendors, facilitated on job training, knowledge transfer and mentorship among staff, held
seminars, introduced e-learning portal for specialized certification, and seconding different
personnel to Vodafone sister companies for wider exposure in the global market.
Divisional level KPIs were aligned to the business objectives with the purpose of diffusing
existing silos in a view of a common prioritization of projects and allocation of resource to
achieve the desired results. This led to a vertical mutual thinking along the corporate agenda
whereas the profit centres provided sales, the non-profit centres delivered the solutions and
support with a mutual intention of transforming lives within respective functional units. The
company provided essential budgetary allocation for this new dimension through road show,
promotions and putting up necessary infrastructure to provide the platform for change.
4.4.5 Reinforcement to Sustain Change
According to the respondents Safaricom reinforced change by encouraging an environment
of talking to each other, through introduction of „in your shoe‟ program that enabled staff to
understand and appreciate what others in different section do to realize the corporate agenda,
this fostered team spirit in that staff viewed themselves as having a common agenda and not
independent work groups that led to unhealthy competition and shifting of blame among
teams whenever there was trouble or an incident in the past. Team building across divisions
was organized for purpose of familiarizing each other under the new structure with
continuous engagement by HR and senior management to obtain progressive feedback.
36
Outstanding performers under the new structure were rewarded with better bonuses and
salary increment. Those who contributed on major projects that had a turn around on
business were recognized, rewarded with monitory, trophies and had their names encrypted
on the wall of fame for all to see resulting in a highly motivated workforce desiring to be
recognized in subsequent periods. Opportunities for career growth in the form of specialized
assignment such as principles, subject matter experts and distinguished engineer were
introduced in technology division to provide avenue for non-management based promotions.
Interviewees established that an appraisal technique was introduced in which performance of
individual employee was moderated by cross-sectional managers and ascertained how the
staff related with other work groups in delivering desired customer needs. Contributions of
individuals were analyzed based on all aspects of service provision with performers being
rewarded while consistent non-performers were counseled on issue derailing their
performance failure which a consequence matrix was applied. Further, regular question
answer session and forums conducted to ascertain how teams are faring on with the changes
and feedback from employees experiences through the change collected for review to
improve and take necessary corrective actions.
The respondents observed that inclusion of the new strategic direction pillars such BNK,
CDI and Safaricom way in the annual individual objectives from which employee
performance would be rated provided necessary reinforcement. Employee survey provided
feedback on the progress status of the various levels of changes from the point of view of the
employees. Manager index rating provided a perception of employees to managers
relationship in which the result therefore would determine the manager ability to govern and
37
lead his team, this survey imposed on managers the need to have a relationship with the
team they lead thus reinforcing the culture of trust across the layers and improving the
organizational climate. Employee survey according to the respondents enabled the
organization to know where it is in terms of synchronizing management and employee
relationship and highlighted what more needed to be done to achieve the set targets.
4.5 Integrating people and business dimension of change
According to the interviewees for any successful change to be realized the business
dimension and the people dimension had to be in tandem. An interviewee indicated that
Safaricom under the new dispensation emphasized on a symbiotic relationship between the
people and the business, with the realization that having a motivated staff resulted in high
retention of the best minds and elimination of resistances to change. Further, identified that
service provision was not like goods delivery as the emotional status of the service desk
representative determines the clients perception and intake of the value of the service hence
having a happy staff goes a long way in providing customer satisfaction as negative
presentation at the call center or retail shop will be too late to correct the resultant damages
unlike goods which can easily be recalled.
Interviewees observed that for Safaricom to realize speed, simplicity and trust as Safaricom
culture, the business had to intervene on cares and concerns of issues which interfere with
employee concentration at work. The issues identified included personal development,
financial independence, career and academic development, social matters especially for
post-natal care, health and fitness and compensation for extra working hours meant for
personal life. On personal development the respondents said Safaricom provided mortgage
38
arrangements, car loans at highly competitive rates and free parking for staff. On financial
independence the company brought in investment consultants to advise employees on ways
of achieving financial independence, employees were given employee stock ownership plan
(ESOP), investment opportunities given through Safaricom investment cooperative (SIC),
Safaricom SACCO for staff to be able to own property while others follow the logistical
requirements. Safaricom provided dual career path to allow all employees have equal
opportunities for growth and therefore people did not have to wait to be managers to move
up the leader but through their involvement would move up as specialists. Sending staff to
other countries through exchange program with Vodafone group members provided career
growth as well as import of best practices for mentorship and ultimately lower support costs
as the skilled force would be up to the task. Introduction of Safaricom resource center
provided room for a wholesome academic growth providing access to information in all
fields of learning within the premises and therefore staff spent more time in the office and
login into the resource center libraries at free times.
On wellness and social matters it was observed that Safaricom provided medical cover for
entire nuclear family, annual health clinics to check on personal health status. In addition
parents with young children were provided with day-care/crèche facilities at work place
where their young ones will be taken care off while the parents perform their duties in the
offices, this gave full relieve to the mothers and added concentration coupled with peace of
mind was realized among them. Recreational and fitness facilities such as gym were
provided at affordable rates. Flexi working hours, telecommuting and teleconferencing
options were introduced to allow staff do what they are meant to do effectively, efficiently
and conveniently for greater output providing a staff friendly environment.
39
Further, the respondents said that Safaricom provides overtime and call out payments for
work done out of the normal working hours, bonuses and salary review given annually
based on employee performance and provision of transport facilities when working out of
normal working hours and stations with travel allowances where applicable. When
employees are transferred to new station relocation allowances are provided to meet the
expenses of migration and settling in the new environment.
On recruitment and restructuring the interview observed that the company put up a high
threshold for qualification of its senior staff and all position advertised so as to obtain a
people who match the new expectation and challenges. Existing and new applicants went
through an open interview process that selected only those with suitable skill set, energy and
aptitude for continuous learning to meet the needs for a renewed Safaricom culture. In the
restructuring, emphasis was put on placing people in the right places matching their skills,
interest, passion and trainings to the positions they will hold.
When respondents were asked how Safaricom ensured employees transitioned successfully
through the change, they observed that all staff were involved in the change process and
were given opportunity to share their views on things they would like the business to do for
them in order to serve the customers with speed, simplicity and trust. A staff council was set
up for staff to get their representatives raise in the council session any arising concerns from
the change that needed to be addressed by senior leadership with meetings held every
quarter to respond to the voices of the employees from all divisions.
Further the interviews observed that an open door policy was implemented with all cubicles
for senior managers brought down to create a common environment with employees on their
40
work stations and activate a free flow of information either formal or informal resulting in
relaxed relationship with management. People management was observed to contribute to
20% of manager‟s performance rating. In this regard interviewee Z said,
“If you have engaged employees they will deliver more than employees who are
there just to earn salary. Most often the reason why people leave a company is not
pay but because they are leaving their managers”.
Systems were put in place to lock events into the new order of business and regular audits
done both internal and external to keep check of activities and mitigate on reverting to the
old ways of doing business. Behavioral functional ethics were introduced of speed,
simplicity and trust and this emphasized through Safaricom people development program
(SPDP) offered in three categories namely Safaricom employee development program
(SAE) for entry level, Safaricom manager development program (SAM) for middle level
and Safaricom leader development program (SAL) in advanced level, these were used to
equip the employees in all aspects of service delivery and personal development for
sustaining a strategic advantage over the long term. This program according to the
respondents was geared towards having a shared way of doing things in Safaricom and
develops a high performance organization.
Interviewees observed that for organization to successful implement change all parties must
be change ready as a team. Safaricom aligned all divisional strategies to the corporate
strategy of customer focus and same was cascaded to individual objectives taking the
customer as king and his delight was to be the joy of Safaricom as a whole. Key was
delivering what you have promised to the customer with speed, simplicity and trust. All
employees were involved in driving change from lower layers to upper layer of leadership
41
hierarchy. Open door policy was embraced by management destroying the silos and doing
away with VIP lifts, closed management offices resulting in accessibility by all to all and
sharing common amenities among all employees despite their ranks. This provided an
avenue for sharing ideas between management and employees and between teams creating
an organizational climate optimum for change.
Forums for innovators was also introduced, where according to the respondents, initially
ideas came from above but in the current regime an innovation forum dapped Zindua café
was formed by strategy and innovation division where employees would post their ideas via
internal Zindua café portal, screening will be done by innovation team to check for
duplicates, vetting and scoring using pre-defined metrics is done and then successful ideas
are adapted. This provided a sense of appreciation to the employee skills and the company
as well obtained new products internally.
Employee survey was carried out to enable senior leadership understand what employees
felt about the company and what their expectations were. Issues raised were dealt with such
as employee work life balance thus provision of flexi working hours, salary reviews to
cushion staff over inflation, recreation facilities, ESOP and simple dress code- smart casual
implemented. Staff who felt negatively affected by the change went through counseling
processes to align their attitudes to what change was meant for, transforming lives. Trainings
were organized not only for hard hand skills but also soft life skills such as personal finance
and personal healthy living across the company divisions. Respondents noted that with this
kind of equipping it was easier for change to be adopted and implemented as employees felt
that they were part of the organizations resulting in a quick buy in to support change.
42
4.6 Resistance to Change at Safaricom
According to the respondents there was a mild people resistance to change. The resistance
was noticed in unexplained delays on responses, staff complains about wrong timing and
lack of effective communication especially in introduction of a new appraisal method mid-
year yet objective setting was done on a different appraisal regime and therefore the
interviewee observed that the staff felt that it was not just nor fair to use a technique in
appraising them that was not used in developing the objective upon which the performance
marking was to be based. The interviewees observed that the reasons for resistance were
inertia to radical change, insecurity and uncertainty of what the change would bring.
They further observed that individuals who could have been favored by status quo perceived
that the change threatened their immediate gains hence had a go slow in embracing change.
Further the bell curve designed to be the foundation of performance appraisal was perceived
to conclude that majority of the employees were average with limited justification hence this
approach was seen to be dictatorial as there was no employee involvement in coming up
with the new appraisal technique.
The respondents observed that the resistance was mitigated through offsite meetings, direct
communication by CEO and human resource department using video links, staff bulletin
updating staff on the progress. On departmental levels HoDs, human resource business
partners and senior managers held town hall meetings, workshops and forums with more
question answer session to demystify the entire process. The behavioral resistance was
contained as the critical mass necessary for the success of change was achieved across all
layers of management.
43
The interviewees noted that the employee expectation was managed through regular
sectional briefings, off-site meetings and person to person engagement with sectional change
agents. However in situation of persistent resistance it resulted in separation and those who
could not align themselves therefore, exited the company. According to the interviewees
those who were affected in the restructuring and positions taken by a new team they were
managed out through a fair exit package.
4.7 Discussion of Findings
The research established that for a successful implementation of a strategic change, for any
systemic change there must be an equal behavioral change at the same time otherwise
resistance will take place. The behavioral change required must be symbiotic in nature,
where the people involved in the change perceive and actually receive personal gain and
development while the organization obtains behavior that supports the changes and delivers
the corporate agenda.
The study observed that Safaricom was operating in an open system, whose success in a stiff
environment would depend on the feedback from internal and external reactions and how the
feedback would be processed for the company to gain a competitive advantage in the
industry. This deduction is in agreement with Burnes (2009) argument that organizations are
open systems whose internal operations and effectiveness are dependent upon the particular
situational variables they face at any one time.
During the study it was found out that when Safaricom employees understood that the
changes were meant neither to punish nor witch hunt but for the common good of the
44
company‟s and employees‟ prosperity, change was then embraced. As regular and clear
communication was provided through forums, road shows, question answer sessions and
workshop greater support for change was realized with increased attendance to feedback
session and participation in staff survey.
The research established that in an open system the interface between an organization and
the external environment require a greater integration of people dimension of change and the
business dimension of change to achieve desired result. In the case of Safaricom the roles of
the customer facing sections became one of the major objectives of the top level
management to enable customers perceive Safaricom as a partner of choice and employees
being appraised with customer delight index being part of every employee KPIs.
On integrating business and people dimension of change, it was established that people
dimension of change is not only how employees behave to and in the organization for
change but also how the organization handles its staff for the employees to feel appreciated,
honored and valued. Through personal development seminars such as managing your
finances and staff people development program, use of flexible schedules such as
telecommuting where individual can remotely work from any station without coming to the
office, flexi working hours for those who think they work better early to report to work early
and leave early while others report late and leave late provided an impressive avenue for
optimum working times. This was found to have built a relationship of trust between the
employer and employee catalyzing the output of the employees, agreeing with Saratoga
(2010) argument that it is not people that are the greatest assets to an organization, but the
relationship with them.
45
Respondents said that integrating people and business dimension of change had given
Safaricom competitiveness as employee work at their optimum, delivering services at their
fullest of abilities and know how. Safaricom has become an employer of choice attracting
great minds where everyone wants to work for and with Safaricom ltd. It has also enabled
the company to retain the best skills within the market, thus guaranteeing skill continuity.
For organizations to successfully implement change it was observed that credibility of the
messenger is critical, publicity and communication must be done, staff should be involved
from the beginning then through preparation to implementation, equip the staff with
necessary skills for change, allocate adequate budget, allocate reasonable time to implement
change and periodical progress measured through feedback from which results and
corrective actions shared with all employees on current ratings verses expected targets.
It was established that people will either embrace and support change or resist change and
like one steel company that said that our business is steel but our strength is our people. This
indicates that the power of an organization is the type of people it has and the skillset
coalescing around them.For successful change all individuals need to make a personal
decision to support and participate in the change taking a concerted and on-going effort to
make change stick. Therefore, if you are an employee in an organization undergoing change,
your reaction to the change and how you are viewed by the organization will directly affect
change management in line with Hiatt (2006) ADKAR model suggestion that successful
change happens when both dimensions of change occur simultaneously.
46
CHAPTER FIVE: SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND
RECOMMENDATIONS
5.1 Introduction
This chapter presents a summary, conclusions and recommendations of the study. The
conclusions and recommendations drawn are in quest of addressing the research objective of
determining the extent to which the business and the people dimension of change have been
integrated at Safaricom ltd, Kenya. From the study findings and conclusions,
recommendations are given on how to improve on issues of policy and practise.
5.2 Summary of the Findings
The study established that Safaricom Ltd indeed undertook strategic changes that affected
the people and the business dimensions. From the study it is observed that the forces that
necessitated change were external in nature and to deal with them required a change in
internal environment and regular analysis of feedback. The forces of change included high
level of industry competition, desire to match the ever changing demands of informed and
learning customers and the knowledge that the status quo could not sustain the revenue
growth further.
It was further observed that even when things are bad, there is some level of comfort with
status quo. Even in the same organization everyone does not hear about change at the same
time and everyone does not process change at the same pace therefore, buy-in to change
becomes an individual commitment and thus successful strategic change occurs only when
each person is able to transition successfully.
47
The research found out that engaging employees through the change process by way of
making them aware why they need to change, what is in it for them and training them to be
ready for change with providing essential budgetary allocation for change provides a smooth
transition through the change period. By rewarding those who go beyond their means to
deliver, recognizing best efforts and compensating sacrifices made reinforces change. This
also encourages positive feedback with the desire of having corrective measures for
improved and better service delivery.
Internal harmonization of objectives is essential for an organization‟s goals to be realized.
Employee‟s, manager‟s and CEO‟s objectives must be tied towards the corporate objective
so that the entire team works in harmony in achieving the desired goals. Appreciation of
what other work groups are doing through publicity, in your shoe program and team
building assist in synchronizing the roles of teams in achieving excellent result.
5.3 Conclusion
For an organization to successful implement change all parties involved must be change
ready as a team and for any successful change to be realized the business dimension and the
people dimension must be in tandem. The business must look down and reach the needs of
the employees and the people must look up and pick the goals of the organizations for a
mutual gain. The relationship an organization has with the people determines the extent in
which the organization achieves its mission. The relationship is built when the level of trust
increases derived from regular communication and working closely together bound by a
similar objective.
48
For an organization to have a homogenous objective between people and the business and
across the business units, all institutional subsystems must know and have the feel of what
other workgroups are doing. This gives a conscious actionning of roles to support the roles
of other work groups up the value chain. There cannot be success in an organization where
subsystems and the business as an entity work in isolation of the people needs. A
relationship of trust between employees and the business and across building units is the key
that unlocks an organization‟s potential. This observation blends with Senge (2006)
argument that people excel when there is a genuine shared vision and not the familiar
traditional vision statement.
The study revealed that integrating people and business dimension of change is paramount
in management of strategic change and for the establishment of a team spirit that contain a
competitive advantage to overcome negative internal and external forces. Communication,
communication and communication is essential in integrating business and people aspects of
change in organizational success.
Collaboration between the people and the business results in a motivated workforce eager to
bring giant results to a motivated employer, resulting in a motivating organizational climate
ideal for retention, high profitability and unmatched competitive advantage in any given
industry. Therefore, in the current turbulent environment, learning organization must
integrate the people dimension of change with the business dimension of change to remain
competitive both in service delivery, being an employer of choice and a partner of choice in
business.
49
5.4 Recommendations for Policy and Practice
The study established that there is room for improvement in Safaricom‟s integration of
dimensions of change to realize best practices in change management. The research
therefore recommend that the company should encourage employees to use available
avenues such as people surveys to genuinely express themselves and raise issues pertinent to
improving the organization‟s climate to optimum productivity. The organization should keep
the communication channels widely open, provide regular feedback and be seen to respond
and act on the suggestion given by employees continually.
The organisation‟s management needs to prioritise the activities that give quick significant
improvement on the relationship between the employees and the business. Employees are
the ambassadors of Safaricom and therefore they ought to be in a mind-set and an emotional
state to keep Safaricom way in them on and off duty. Keeping employees in regular
awareness in what is cooking through regular communication before, during and after the
change should be encouraged to keep the trust burning. Employees should be made aware of
what is in it for them in the change process and change messengers should always be
credible and full involvement of all stakeholders established before rolling out any change
initiative.
The policy makers, regulators and government in general have an opportunity to understand
the dynamics of integrating people and business dimension of change for harmonization of
objectives and reduce behavioural and systemic resistances in organizations. Scholars and
researchers will also find the results of this study useful for further research. The findings of
50
this study will be of value to mobile telephony industry through the turbulent times. The
insights on this dimension of strategic change management by a successful MNO offers
lessons and make both anticipation and management of dimensions of change a reality.
5.5 Limitation of the Study
The research being a case study was limited to only one mobile network operator. This
means that information from other players was not included in the study and therefore the
findings and conclusion made may be unique to Safaricom only yet the industry is not
monopolistic hence it may not be sufficient to generalize the findings at this stage on
integrating people and business dimension of change in mobile telephony industry.
The time available for interviews was limited since all interviewees were interviewed in
their work places and could only manage to spare an hour from their busy schedules. Some
of the interviewees being senior managers, due to the nature of their daily engagements,
could not be found and it took long to get appointments a times rescheduling the meetings
due to urgent assignments. With available time some issues could not as well be
exhaustively interrogated or responded to during the interview.
5.6 Areas for Further Research
The case study has focused on Safaricom limited only and therefore, the findings have not
exhausted the mobile telephony industry. With the same conceptualization a similar research
should be replicated in another mobile network operator to provide a different context so as
to interrogate and verify the results found in this study for purposes of obtaining an across
industry conclusion.
51
Since factors and catalyst of performances could be similar across service industry a similar
research is recommended to be done in an organization of any other service industry other
than in mobile telephony industry. This will enable scholar to ascertain the impact of
integrating people and business dimension of change in service industry by comparing the
studied industry with results obtained for studies made in mobile telephony industry.
The research should also be moved further from a case study to a survey so that comparison
can be done across the industry to be able to obtain rich data which can be applied to the
mobile telephony industry. A survey research would require quantitative analysis of data
which would therefore increase the confidence level of the findings and provide avenue to
generalize the obtained conclusion.
The study gave an opportunity for more studies to be carried out on the relationship between
business dimension of change and people dimension of change. The future scholars
therefore should study more to understand the effects and impact of business and people
dimension of change in performance of mobile network operators.
52
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APPENDICES
Appendix I: Introduction Letter
59
Appendix II: Letter Requesting Permission to Carry out Research
BWALEY K. THOMAS,
P.O. BOX 383-0030100,
ELDORET.
DIRECTOR RESOURCES,
SAFARICOM LTD,
P.O. BOX 66827-00800,
NAIROBI.
Dear Sir/Madam,
PERMISSION TO CARRY OUT RESEARCH ON INTEGRATING BUSINESS AND
PEOPLE DIMENSION OF CHANGE AT SAFARICOM LIMITED,KENYA.
I am a postgraduate student at the University of Nairobi, School of Business. I am currently
conducting a research in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award of the degree
of Masters of Business Administration.
I humbly request for permission to carry out the research at your esteemed company on the
topic: Integrating business and people dimension of change at Safaricom Ltd.
This study is purely for academic purposes and its findings, which will be made available to
you, will not be in any way used in ways detrimental to your organization.
Your assistance will be highly appreciated.
Yours faithfully,
BWALEY K. THOMAS
60
Appendix III: Interview Guide
TOPIC: Integrating business and people dimension of change at Safaricom Ltd.
PART A: ORGANIZATIONAL PROFILE
Employment title: __________________________________________
Department: ______________________________________________
1. How long, in years have you worked with Safaricom Ltd? ……………….
2. How many years have you been in your current position? ………………..
PART B: INTERVIEW QUESTIONS
1. Has Safaricom undergone any strategic change program in the recent past? If yes
what did the change entail?
2. What changes have taken place at Safaricom Kenya ltd. pertaining the following;
a) The business
b) The people
3. How did the business prepare itself as an entity for the changes you have mentioned?
4. What did Safaricom do to ensure that all employees transition successfully?
5. How were people equipped before and during the change?
6. What were the gains obtained by equipping the employees before the change?
61
7. Are employees guided through the change process? If yes, how is it done?
8. What has Safaricom done to ensure change stay in place and that individuals do not
revert to old ways?
9. Was there any resistance to Safaricom‟s strategic change? If yes what type of
resistance?
10. What were the causes of resistance given above?
11. What did Safaricom do to reduce or mitigate on the resistances to the change?
12. The following actions are necessary in guiding employees through a change process
in an organization. What specific measures are used in Safaricom ltd to address
among the employees:
i. Creating awareness for the need for change.
ii. Developing a desire to participate and support change.
iii. Developing a knowledge base of how to change
iv. Facilitating the ability to roll out and implement change
v. Reinforcement to sustain change.
13. How does Safaricom identify the people needs to meet the business needs?
14. Has Safaricom integrated people and business aspect of change? If yes, how has it
done?
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15. The concept of harmony of objectives notes that individuals have personal goals that
are different from organizational goals but these can be harmonized. How has
Safaricom harmonized employee‟s goals and the organization‟s goals?
16. Is there any activity undertaken currently at Safaricom ltd to synchronize business
and people aspects of change? If yes what are the examples of these activities?
17. What are the gains of harmonizing people dimension and business dimension of
change at Safaricom ltd?
18. How is the harmonization of these dimensions being reinforced at Safaricom ltd?
19. To what extent has Safaricom integrated People and business dimension of change?
20. How has the organization‟s culture, values, and behaviours been used to encourage
the desired results?
21. For an organization to successfully implement change what must it do?
22. What other comment or suggestion would you make about the impact of integrating
people and business dimension of change in an organization?
Thank you greatly for your cooperation and sincere responses.
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